Conservatives know from experience that Democrats will say just about anything to get elected – but several recent incidents reveal they’ll do just about anything to get elected, too. Whether it’s a Democrat yelling obscenities at your family or stealing your yard signs under the cover of night, if you’re a Republican, you’d better watch your back.

Email, social media, especially Twitter and Facebook, and online video are now important parts of any successful campaign and we can’t win without them as the Romney campaign’s failed online effort demonstrated in 2010. That’s why CHQ created our “Free Conservative Get Out The Vote Tool Kit” to help conservatives nationalize, and win, the 2014 midterm election.

A new report by the Center for Immigration Studies shows that the state with senators (Jeanne Shaheen (D) & Kelly Ayotte (R)) who both voted for the “Gang of Eight” immigration bill has 71% of its job growth going to foreign-born workers, including legal and illegal immigrants

Candidates who have avoided or not stuck with nationalizing the election, such as Mike Rounds in South Dakota and Thom Tillis in North Carolina, have struggled, while Scott Brown, by standing up for American workers and opposing amnesty for illegal aliens has taken his underfunded campaign from the cellar to actually leading incumbent Democrat Jeanne Shaheen in some of the latest polls.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen's campaign barred BreitbartNews reporter Matt Boyle from attending one of their open to the media events. Shaheen showed that she's been one of Obama’s biggest Senate supporters and that she approves of his running roughshod over the inconvenient freedom of the press.

Right now America is laughing at Obama supporters like New Hampshire’s Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen – and it’s the kind of laugh that comes when you finally get fed-up and call B.S. on someone trying to worm out of taking responsibility for their own failure.

Brown has done everything he can to nationalize the campaign — becoming the first Senate candidate to run an ad on immigration and the border crisis. He has also hit Shaheen over Islamic State terrorism and pushed her to call for a travel ban to contain Ebola.

Scott Brown’s brash, stick-it-to-the-man style of smash mouth politics—and his nationalizing of this race—is lifting up other New Hampshire GOP candidates like Frank Guinta, according to Matt Boyle’s analysis of the New Hampshire political scene.

New Hampshire’s GOP U.S. Senate candidate Scott Brown ripped Obama's planned executive amnesty and said his opponent isn’t doing anything to stop it. Brown’s nationalizing of this race is lifting his candidacy as well as those of other New Hampshire Republicans.

A new poll of the New Hampshire Senate race finds Republican Scott Brown within three points of Democrat Jeanne Shaheen. On Saturday Brown reiterated his support for a travel ban to and from those West African countries where Ebola virus inspection is widespread.

Behind the scenes, campaigns evaluating the polling are seeing unbelievable numbers on the issue that belie popular narratives about how popular comprehensive immigration reform is. How much longer will Republicans resist the urge to fully embrace the issue?

Republicans across the country are defying the RNC’s post-2012 dictum that GOP candidates must soften their tone on illegal immigration and line up behind comprehensive immigration reform. No surprise -- it's working for them.

If Republicans do well in the House next month, that will go a long way toward preventing a liberal governing majority until at least 2019. As for the Senate, the GOP’s prospects include the good, the bad, and the ugly.

There is winning well, and then there is winning poorly. Every cent that the the NRSC spent on those candidates in the primaries is a cent that did not go to general races in NH, OR, MN, MI and yes, maybe even NJ.

Scott Brown is hammering his Democratic opponent on immigration and national security, and surging, while other Republican Senate candidates are running on their resumes, avoiding immigration and national security, and lagging.

NH Senate candidate Scott Brown is scheduled to deliver an address Weds. in which he plans to call for the U.S. to reclaim its leadership role in int'l affairs and will accuse Obama and his allies of pursuing a foreign policy that is “devoid of ideas.”